CCC '03 S2 - Poetry

Canadian Computing Competition: 2003 Stage 1, Junior #4, Senior #2

A simple poem consists of one or more four-line verses. Each line
consists of one or more words consisting of upper or lower case letters,
or a combination of both upper and lower case letters. Adjacent words on
a line are separated by a single space.

We define the last syllable of a word to be the sequence of letters from
the last vowel (a, e, i, o or u, but not y) to the end of
the word. If a word has no vowel, then the last syllable is the word
itself. We say that two lines rhyme if their last syllables are the
same, ignoring case.

You are to classify the form of rhyme in each verse. The form of rhyme
can be perfect, even, cross, shell, or free:

perfect rhyme: the four lines in the verse all rhyme

even rhyme: the first two lines rhyme and the last two lines rhyme

cross rhyme: the first and third lines rhyme, as do the second and fourth

shell rhyme: the first and fourth lines rhyme, as do the second and third

free rhyme: any form that is not perfect, even, cross, or shell.

The first line of the input file contains an integer ~N~, the number of
verses in the poem, ~1 \le N \le 5~. The following ~4N~ lines of the input
file contain the lines of the poem. Each line contains at most
~80~ letters of the alphabet and spaces as described above.

The output should have ~N~ lines. For each verse of the poem there
should a single line containing one of the words perfect, even,
cross, shell or free describing the form of rhyme in that verse.

Sample Input 1

1
One plus one is small
one hundred plus one is not
you might be very tall
but summer is not

Output for Sample Input 1

cross

Sample Input 2

2
I say to you boo
You say boohoo
I cry too
It is too much foo
Your teacher has to mark
and mark and mark and teach
To do well on this contest you have to reach
for everything with a lark

Output for Sample Input 2

perfect
shell

Sample Input 3

2
It seems though
that without some dough
creating such a bash
is a weighty in terms of cash
But how I see
the problem so fair
is to write subtle verse
with hardly a rhyme